The Turner tribune. (Turner, Or.) 19??-19??, October 03, 1929, Image 2

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    TH F. T R IB U N E . T U R N E R . OREGON
The
Fifi Dort« y
SAND
STOR
V w w
By th* BARONESS ORCZY
Copyr«*ht IU ron «M Orc«|
W N l* »v r v lo «
CHAPTER V III— Continued
— IS—
squealed with great delight over I t
“ Then 1 went along the street o f a
little town and the street waa named
E T E R (¡N O M E c a n » back to Fairy­
Shoe la n e , but all the children play­
land one evenlug Juat ua the atara
ing along the street were bare-legged I
w ere coming oat and aa Mr. Moon
“ Tney were playing by a narrow
was peering down over the topa of
river stream and they were playing
the trees.
with a ball which constantly kept fall
"Oh, such a splendid trip aa 1 bad.”
tng In the river.
ha aald.
“ They really seemed to enjoy seeing
All the Gnomea and Brownlee and
It go In for the fun o f getting It out,
E v e s and Fairies wanted to hear
and they would lean down on the
about I t
bank and try to kick out for tu
“ First o f all I went where It waa
“ Oh. one child wore shoes, but she
aalte warm.
I wandered doom to
went In the water Just the same and
have a look at old Mother Ocean and
when she drew her feet out she would
there 1 aaw, on the sand, the loveliest
Jump up and down and try to push
aand house I have ever seen. It was
the water ou t 1 was dreadfully afraid
rather wet and It stuck together beau­
she would get cold, but It seemed
tifully. I must say, and on the top
these were to protect her feet which
waa a little thatched roof made out
she had hurt on the stones the week
of seaweed.
before.
" I t waa a beautiful aand house.
“ Then I passed by a long, long row
“ Mother Ocean told me o f some boy
o f gulls sitting on the narrow ridge
around a long building, and on the
fence In front o f the building was an-
other long row o f gulls.
“ It looked as though they were hav­
ing gull school and as though when
some one sat on one leg that they
were doing this to let the teacher
know that they were putting up a
hand to show they could answer the
question.
“ Other gulls I saw flying so beauti­
fully with their feet tucked neatly
under them and I beard one say to
the other:
“ 'W ith all their great Ideas and
Inventions I f a boat rocks the people
rock too, but we are not bothered by
a rough sea passage as our wings
carry us where we wish to go.’
“ Then 1 saw an elephant In the
roo and It was a holiday. He was
• It Looked aa Though They W ere
giving the children rides. And there
Having Gull School."
was always a line waiting to climb
who said be had seen a big map. but
upon his back. It was certainly his
be had no Idea o f how much apace she
busy day, I said to myself.
took up until be took an ocean voyage
“ And again I passed by Mother
and kept on going and going and
Ocean. Only she was very rough and
atlll was on the ocean.
angry and I said to m yself It was a
“ H e said, so Mother Ocean told me,
good thing the W ave children didn't
that the Open Sea’ waa certainly very
mind.
enormous, and It certainly meant
“ Certainly real children could never
something. For It waa certainly open
stand so angry s mother.
It was
and nothing got In Its way.
raining hard, too. I couldn't Imagine
“ And she said the boy seemed to
that the ocean needed rain.
She
be surprised that so many boats went didn’t have any crops to think about
on the ocean and y e t when they were
or any garden. And she had all the
out at sea. they saw hardly any— and
water she needed. But still It was
only one or two as they were leaving.
pouring.
“ Mother Ocean waa amused that the
“ I passed by a house and took a
boy didn't begin to realise her great
peep In the window where some chil­
and enormous slse until he took a
dren were having a party and they
trip with his fam ily crossing the
had their dolls with them. The dolls
were dressed In all kinds o f costumes
“ Then down by the bay (1 wore my
and one In a party dress sat beside a
invisible robe—my suit which Is made
doll In a calico Jumper and I was
so human eyes can't see m e). I
glad to see that there was no foolish
watched some children playing among
snobbery In the doll world.
the stones.
“ And then, on my way borne. I saw
“ They were playing •Castle* and
a beautiful rainbow, which I thought
days o f long ago, and It seemed
was a lovely ending to my trip.“
a beautiful game. They shrieked and
(C opyright.)
ABOUT MOTHER OCEAN
P
W ky W e Do
W Kot W e D o
k y I L L TH O M SO N . Pb. D.
W H Y MEN DRESS
SH O R T time ago It was reported
that s bishop speaking to s group
o f ministers advised them to raise
mustaches because be thought It was
the only mark o f distinction between
• man and a woman.
In matters o f dress the chief distinc­
tion Is that women spend more time
and money on them. The National
R etail Dry Goods association was
recently told that the average man
attends $85 a year on clothes, while
the average woman spends $236.
Judged by this standard, clothes are
about three times as Important to a
woman aa they are to a man. And
yet most women admit that they
haven't a thing to wear—when they
are invited out
Women are also more exclusive In
their taste. N o woman will wear a
bat that la exact’ “ like another wom­
an's h a t What man would think o f
wearing a hat that Is the only one of
Its kind In existence!
Women have
common aversions, men have common
likes.
Women make greater ose of
dress a » a means o f expressing their
personality in the unusual and dis­
tinctive.
A
A man's chief motive In dress Is to
be conventional. Inconspicuous.
It
makes him feel more at ease and less
self-conscious I f be knows that his
clothes pass muster.
During the
W orld war the men In the trenches
were encouraged to shave every dey
and to look to their clothes as a
means o f Increasing morale and self-
respecL
Except In the case o f the dude and
the dandy the average man wonld
rather be a little under than a little
overdressed. Note hew hard It Is to
get a man to attend a full dress affair.
N o man quite gets over his boyhood
aversion to too much finery.
The
“ regular fellers” never doll up. It Is
nut considered manly to carry the
thing too far.
A well dressed boy
suffers unspeakable humiliation at the
bands o f the gang.
He never for­
gets IL
(& by M sC lw * N *wap*p*r SyndlcaU.)
R ain fall Under a R oof
T h e palmhouse o f the botanical
gardens -it Leningrad it waterec by bd
artificial rainfall which Is distributed
over the enllre Interim at one time
T h e water is forced through ihe pl|>ea
electrically and the flow Is controlled
through the operation of a single
switch.
‘ ‘ L i v * ’ ’ S tea m
Steam Is said to tie live steam at
sny temperature above 212 degrees
F ah ren h eit
An Adventure of the Scarlet
Pimpernel
Fill Dor-say was recently wooed from
the stag* to Movietones, and gives av-
sry promise of becoming a star In th*
“talkies.“ She has s rols with W ill
Rogers In his first conversation pic­
ture—“ They Had to See Parle." Fifl
came here a few years ago from
Frkncs, when she became an Instant
hit in “ The Greenwich Follies." Later
she was In vaudeville. Bridge Is on«
of her hobbles; she likes swimming
and reading.
----------- O-----------
oooooooooooooooooooooooopq
For Meditation
oooooo
By LE O NARD A . B AR R E TT
oooooooooooooooooooooooooo
WHO OWNS THE PICTURE?
A
M A STE R PIE C E , the product of
an old Flemish school, has disap­
peared from the A rt museum at Ant­
werp. Though o f small ill mentions,
only six by eight Inches, It la valued
at twenty-five thousand dollars. Un­
doubtedly the person who stole the
picture hopes to realise a fabulous
sum I f he succeeds In evading arrest
long enough to find s purchaser.
Immense s u m s
o f money, some as
high as hundreds
of
thousands o f
dollars, are paid
fo r famous paint­
ings a n d
other
works o f art. These
valuable treasures,
ether through be­
quests
or
p u r-
chases, ultimately
find their way Into
art galleries where
the public, fo r a
small
admittance
fee. may see them.
The q u e s t i o n
naturally
arises:
L. A Barrett.
W ho really owns
the picture? The person who has suf­
ficient money to buy 1L or the art gal­
lery to which It Is bequeathed?
Real possession o f sn object Is not
necessarily gained by purchase. Oue
person may bold a title deed to a
piece o f property environed by very
beautiful scenery, but the person who
really owns It Is the one who Is able
to appreciate Its beauty. For a cer­
tain price one may gain admittance to
a famous opera or an evening’s pro­
gram by a great orchestra. The price
paid for a seat, however generous. Is
no guarantee o f an evening’s enjoy­
ment. On the contrary the perfor­
mance may be very tedious Like art,
which conveys a message only to the
person who has eyes to see, so music
speaks a language only to those who
have ears to hear.
Who owns all the beauty In the
world? Not the person who because
o f his wealth may own a deed o f pos­
session, but the one, who through the
cultivation o f the sense o f the beauti­
ful Is able to appropriate It; he Is It*
real possessor.
T h a g o ld e n p o p p y Is G o d '* g o ld ,
T h * g o ld th a t l i f t * , n o r w e ig h * ua do w n ,
T h * g o ld th a t k n o w a no m is e r '* hold.
T h * g o ld th a t ban k a n ot In th * to w s ,
B u t s in g in g , la u g h in g , fr e e ly s p ills
Its b o ard f a r up tha h a p p y b ills ;
F a r up. f a r d o w n , a t a v e r y tu rn .—
W h a t b e g g a r baa n ot g o ld to b u rn t
(0 , ISSS, Western Newspaper Union.)
----------- o -----------
A C H A IN store friend o f mine sent
* * the announcements o f a prise
contest to his managers by air mall.
That's putting on extra thrill Into the
selling o f beans.
Sign on a roadside barbecue: “ 86.-
500 sandwiches sold here last year.”
And everyone left a grease spot. Judg­
ing from the looks o f the place. Our
Itinerary Is as flexible as restaurant
Jello, but we still expect to get to the
Gulf this season. Wasn’t It General
Grant who waa willing to stick to hls
job all summer?
A newspaper man has Just told me
he gained 30 pounds by drinking but­
termilk every nlgbL Wonder If my
doctor has beard o f that Idea.
—F R E D BAR TO N .
G AB B Y G E R TIE
(C opyright.)
----------- O-----------
Using Forost Resources
The American T ree association Is
concerned over the Increasing use o f
timber In our various Industries and
predicts a famine unless a progressive
reforestation program Is adopted. A
country that has developed as rapidly
as the United States has In the last
half century must Indeed look to the
preservation o f her timber supply.
Our population Is Increasing at the
rate o f approximately 1,000,000 a year.
— Sacramento Union
Build on Boot Hill
“ Boot Illll," near Dodge City, Kan.,
one o f the country's most famous
cemeteries, will become the site o f
that town’s new city ball. Oa this
hill In the 70s anC earlier were
burled the unfortunates who were too
slow on the draw, i t was then s
community where every man was a
law unto himself largely.
Grass and flowers and a new build­
ing to house the city's government,
"N e ve r nilml about your mother
sow. What luiptieucd after thut?”
“ fie said to me, ‘ You go and get on
the seat o f the cart which la up the
I road. It Is my cart. You esu drive
It back to Mantes and icave It and
my liorsos at ths post lug Inu, where
they know me. I’ll look after these
horses for yon, and when the fighting’s
over I'll drive the diligence to I’s rls
No one will be any the wiser and i
don’t tulud a hit o f a tight. I can do
a bit o f fighting m yself.' W ell,"
C harivari nrls
went
on
dolefully.
“ tRere didn't sceiu much hurtn In (hat
1 could see he knew all about horses
from the way he handled them ; but
I'm ny fighting man, and when 1 was
fig u g e d to drive the diligence from
Molaaon to Faria 1 waa not told that
there would he any fighting."
“ So you turned your back on the
diligence, like a coward, and crept
along here— "
"1 didn’t creep, citizen. I followed
you when— *
“ Pardl 1“ Ruffet broke In with an
oath. “ Another o f you that will not
escape punishment. If I had my way
the guillotine would be busy In Munies
for days to come."
th* man explained. "H ow ever, 1 called
to my males, and wo stooped to ■
whut It waa
\Ve were much sur­
prised. you may he sure, to see two
pulre o f feel In ragged alloca
\V<
seized hold of them and pulled. Ths
feet were attached to two pairs of
lega In tattered stockings and breeches.
Finally there emerged from under­
neath th* diligence two ragaimilfine
with mud up to Ibclr eye* slid their
clothing lu ruga
"T h ey wera a sorry looking pair.
\V* put them down for two poltrooua,
not worth powder and shot, and were
Just wondering what ws should ila
with them wltVD suddenly, without th*
sUgbtesI warning, they turned on ua
like a coupls o f demona
Not they
only, for a third fellow seemed to
have eprung out o f th* earth bchlud
ua and couis to their aid. A giant be
w aa"
“ A giant I* Raffet exclulmed, for he
had suddenly remembered ITtlsen
Chauvelln'a warning about th* Eng­
lish spy who was tall above the aver­
age.
“ Aye I A giant, with the etrength
o f au os."
No one fald anything more fur tha
moment T h e « w aa Indeed, nothing
to sny. Reproaches and vituperations
would com* la te r; punishment, too,
perhapa The soldiers and their cap­
tain hung their heuda brooding and
ashamed.
“ K|M>ne Is not more than four kilo-
m elerà rltlseti," Raffet st last rea-
CHAPTER IX
Discomfiture
Thors was nothing for It now but
to allow Charles-Marie to drive ths
cart hack to Mantes, since Its owner
had probably seized au opportunity
by now o f taking to hls h eel* Poor
Ruffet wsa worn out with ths excite­
ment o f the past half-hour, and be­
wildered with all the mystery thui
confronted him at every turn. Vague­
ly he felt that something sinister lurked
b*h l"d this !••( incident recited to him
by Charles-M irle, but for the moment
he did not connect It with the possi­
ble maneuvers o f the English spies.
He thought that chapter o f the day's
hook o f adventure closed. It would
he an extraordinary piece o f lock If
In the end they should still come
across the Scarlet Pimpernel.
Chauveltn had not waited to hear
the whole o f Charles-Murle's tale.
Throughout all the adventures which
had befallen him this day. he had seen
the hand o f bit enemy, the Scarlet
Pimpernel. Now he no longer bad
sny doubt Almost at the first words
uttered by Charles-Marie he had
Jumped to hls f e e t all the stiffness
gone out o f hls bones; and despite
the darkness, the mud and the rain,
he turned and ran up the slushy road
round the bend beyond wlilcb be had
heard the fight a quarter o f an hour
ago. T o Luuzct be had shouted s
curt, “ C om et* and Lauzet had fol
lowed, obedient, understanding, like a
dog. only vaguely scenting danger to
himself, danger more serious than any
that had threatened him during this
eventful day.
ChauvellD ran thrnngh the darkness
with Lauzet at hls heels Despite the
cold and rawness o f Ihe mist, he was
In a bath o f persplrntlon ; though hls
reins were on fire, hls teeth chattered
with the cold. LauzeL behind him
was panting like an apoplectic seal
Soon he fell with a groan by the road
side. But Cbauvrlln did not give In
Stumbling, half dazed, he went round
the bend o f the road ; then he too fell,
exhausted, by [he roadside, exhausted
and trembling as with ague.
The scene which greeted hls aching
eyes had finally unnerved him. There,
on the crest of the bill, he saw three
torses tethered to neighboring trees,
and beside the horses. b< und to the
same trees, three soldiers with their
hats pulled down over their eyes. Of
the diligence there was not a sign
ChauvellD stared and stared at till»
scene. He had not strength enough
to rise. though hls every nerve ached
to go up to one o f those pinioned fig­
ures by the trees and to a*k what had
happened.
Thus Rnffet found him five or ten
minutes later. H e came with hls sol
dlers and a lantern or two. Chauvelln
could not do more at first than point
with trembling finger straight out be­
fore him, and Raffet and the men
swinging their lanterns came on the
spectacle of the three men and the
three horses tied to the forest trees,
the animals, calm aa horses are wont
to be when nature and men are silent
around them ; the men Inert and half
conscious
“ Question them. Citizen Captain.”
Chauvelln commanded feebly.
T h e men's statements, however,
were somewhat vague. It seems that
after their comrades hnd gone off.
some with tlielr captain, others with
the prisoners, the three who were left
behind busied themselves at first with
their horses, examining th# snddle
girths and so on. when one of them
spied something moving underneath
the diligence.
“ It was getting dark by that time,"
symbols o f the newer and better civi­
lization, now are to cover this his­
toric eminence, scene o f pioneer dag
tragedies.—Capper’s Weekly.
A g a o f a Doughnat
According to some pundits, the
doughnut was Invented In Francs 400
years ago. The only thing thut makes
us Inclined to believe they may be
right Is that once In a while we get
hold o f a doughnut that cannot pos­
sibly he less than 400 years old.—
ypokmus (W ash .) Spokesman Hut lew.
K ent
RADIO
HERE IT IS ...from the
LEADER OF RADIO
New Screen-Grill, Electro-Dynamic
BATTERY SET
o f court U’t an Atwater Kent!
P H M di»t*l(rW aw M f
‘ 0U families who
haven't electricity
—who us* b e t­
ter uw to run your radio
—how you wili relish the
news that Atwater Kent
ha* rvn.l v fur you • com­
pletely new battery set
with all the very latest
proved improvements.
■is r o s i r
It’s the modern battery set that
you have been asking Atwstrr Krnt
to make. You can have it in the
compact table mndrl or your choice
of fine cabinet* designed and made
by the leading furniture manufac­
turers of 111* country. And, best of
all, you pay only a moderate price.
ATW A T S * SENT MANL'PACTL’klN U C O
A. Atmtm grad, /ton
«to* Wlra.hu k.«. A n .
rhllsdetoblo. Pa
IN C A U S I T I
JI * » V
A Giant. With th* Strength of
an Oa."
lured to suggest, “ and w* have th*
lan tem a”
ADd *o the procession started, trudg
Ing down the Incline In the darkness
and the ruin; ChauvellD and Lauzet,
Raffet and hls corporal with a couple
o f troopers carrying the lanterns T w o
hours Inter they reached Epone, hun­
gry. tired, spattered with mud up to
their chloa
At EtMine Ruffet‘a courier tost no
time In recounting at full length th*
adventures that hud befallen him and
hls comrades
Thus the story was
all over the district by the time ihe
laborers of Epone hnd gone to theli
work the following morning, and th*
chief o f section In the department of
Seine et Oise, Citizen Lnuxct, hecams
the laughing stock o f the countryside,
together with hls wonderful friend
from P a ris
Late that same day a
horseless diligence, which at first *p
peared deserted and derelict, wus
discovered half a dozen kilometers to
the north o f the forest of Mezleres.
In the mud o f the stream that runs
southward Into the Selua
A group
of laborers going to (heir work were
the first to see IL
It hnd been
dragged Into the strennr and left axis
deep In the water behind a dump of
tall reeda
T h e laborers reported
tlielr find to s patrol o f Itaffet’s
troopers whom he hnd sent nut to
scour the countryside.
The wheels
had sunk deep Into the mire, and It
was only after a great deal o f exer­
tion that laborers nnd soldiers to­
gether succeeded In dragging the
conch over th* (1st hnnk upon firm
land.
“ Truly, fHte ha* been against u a"
Lauzet sighed dolefully. “ Satan alon*
knows where the English spies and
the prisoners are at this hour."
“ W ell on tlielr way to England,'
Chauvelln remarked.
“ I know 'em.
With their long purse and their Im
pudence, they’ll work their wny to th*
coast, aided hy fool* and traitors
Such fools and traitors,“ he added un
der hls breath, "ns helped Uem last
night In their latest ndventnre."
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
AM Bank
No doubt there are lingo
graphers win know the ezftct
o f difference t«-tween hooey,
blah, baloney, applesnuce slid
oil.
T A B i . i n o n s u - t * us
Atwater Kent working without Urns
out for troubl*. For nnmlha It’s
been tested—anil troUd — ami tested
again, on farm after farm, in state
after state.
OS T im
ttk
A t o l e K m t «o d io
linar. Sondar tvonins*. O I» (knotoni Dar-
Beht T a n .) W k A P n e t o « » ot N H G.
A c a t a . ( n l M k l W orS H o r r a n . T h u r »
d * r term ino*. 1* 0 0 1 g a rle ra D a > Itaht T u n r).
WJZ urtwur* uf N. L C
“ A ys!
act
•m o. U ik UI *r s,ra*n-(lrkl tmwlvw. D m * t luto*
ISS. m u cirai' W llb oal tule*. In .
Fra » un n u n t . prauti ra. Mmt*l M S* r—n Grid 10
•alter. I m * A. G tub** (t s - m a Uridl *inl I l a #
tying tub*. Without tub**. M a
Uertra-Dytuuui. h b k - w M I
It comes from the some Stf ocre
factory built by tlie good - will of
t.MO.000 owner* of Atwstrr Kent
Radio. It'* nistle with the same
painstaking car* that keep* an
lextco
shade»
hokum,
banana
Persia Has Salt Lake Larger Than Dead Sea
“ When a girl Is told sha looks swast
snough to sat, ths man p a y s "
tm ater
It. too, is Srreen-Grid.
It, too. is Klectro-Dynamic. It,
too. has the power to leap serosa
the map and bring in thoee far-off
stations. It, too, hru the depth and
richness a t tune, heretofore tInsight
possible only in house-current sets.
■C H l"I t i t i l l i I I H I- H H -H -I H-H I H U H H + H - H - H l"l"H I I I I I I
F ive thoosand feet above sen level
In Persia la to be found * huge, salty
Inland lake.
It Is known ns Urmia
and Is 250 miles around, covering an
area o f 1.00*1 »qunre miles, and boasts
o f some 56 Islands. It Is among the
highest bodies o f salt water on »he
globe.
Ninety miles tong hy some thirty
wide. It completely dwurfs the l*end
sea, something like a mile and s
quarter lower In level, and contains
a greater percentage o f salts In solu
tlon.
Urmia Is fed by a number o f
“.all
streama and la the catch basin for a
considerable area, hut aa It has do
outlet whatever except evaporation
the salt that cornea In staya In. Con
at8nt leaching by the streams brings
In a continuous supply o f suit, nnd
given enough, this results In a salt
lake, for while the evaporation takes
car* o f the water It must leave the
salt behind.
And this Is what has happened to
A
Urmia. For yoara and year* It hai
been becoming saltier and saltier,
probably exceeded In this reaped
only by Knrabugaa, the salt water
annex o f the Caspian tea
No fish
live In IL
W orld’* L arga*! Stona*
In tlie ruins ol the fanmua tempi*
o f the sun god. built by the Roman
emperor. Antonius Plus, at Baalbeck
Syria, ara the largest stone* ev*i
uaed. Hmne o f the great sinn« block»
are more thnn alzty feet long and
nearly twenty feet aquar* on the end
The ruina atlll can he seen a few
miles en»t o f the modern city &
BelruL
P overty and Wealth
Non. Is poor but the incuri In mind
the timorous, the weak and unhellev
Ing; none Is wealthy hut the alHm-nt
In soul, who Is satisfied and flowetl
over.—Tapper.
Th* t o t Araorkon rabanal radier*
renioue for amiral deran and
«ra tin i I
Atwmtar ten t Screen tirkl Radi«
Find New Composition
Help* in Tree Surgery
A composition somewhat Ilk* putty
In Its consistency has lice« recently
found o f value In filling broken or
splintered woodwork. It has several
advantages over putty and other inn
teri.il* designed for this purpoa* In
that th* woody composition may be
cut, carved and treated as wood,
whereas this cannot be done with
putty, fty some modification Ihe same
Idea haa been aucceasfulty applied to
tree surgery. Concrete ban oeen used
for the purpose o f filling m v ltlr* 1«
trees caused by rot, but been tun o f the
constant motion o f tbs tree trunk
this bus a tendency to break away
from the sides o f the cavity nnd In
order to bold It In place It Is neces­
sary to Insert ntrtul strips
The
wood composition does not do this
and really sets to s great degree like
the wood of the tree trunk, contract
Ing and expanding In the same mun
ner, so that It Is quite durable. The
material was that used hy a I'liflndel
phla tree surgeon who gave the new
filler a long nnd severe test before
making any announcement o f the dls
covery.
I f you wish beautiful d e a r white
clothes, use Russ Rail Blue. Large
package at Grocers.— Adv.
Constant Entertainment
“ 1 am uot thick-skinned. I am the
first to laugh at my owu foolishness.'’
“ What a merry life you must lead."
Saved From Octopus
Attacked hy an octopus whll* swim­
ming I d Aksrcs harbor. New Zealand,
T. Vnnglr.nl was saved wher a friend
dived In and beat lb* brute off with e
club. Vsngloul bad dived deep when
the octopus seised him and held him
In Its terrifying grip until beaten off.
The mun was ou the point o f collapse
when rescued.
Scarlet oa tko B*wcli
Scarlet wsa the “ Judicial color"
throughout Ihe Middle ages, and those
dignitaries o f the church who were
entitled to sit as Judges In England
during ths Thirteenth and Fourteenth
-enturles wore robes o f that hue.
?»«<«•* Mdlt bsm | ««
fut. miner ' ,
; SAW MFC CO ..
■IHHia rat
» .*
MMlfftft u
f
» c a J
•• J I M t a n I t s 4 e to
Ih e lt f i d s i e on i now
one th e ! will ho ld Ms
te e th , um lightec and
(M l h o 'd m o o r f
On
tr is ti A not the Moot
r oto rit >e*m ( s p e n t o
- W o ( t o o r o o » torm o
Jregon & California Directory
I.,
i.i.ni.miw. no. .... ...... —-ij..—
, '! jUM.iaggee—
^
Hotel Roosevelt
O ra. m t P O R T L A N D ' 3 N— r H .I .U
AU ro o m . h * v * «»lo w e r o r la b , SS.U0 up. I S t f l N f .
SSI W . Fork et. Coffoo Shop. U » w o p p o .ll«.
HOTEL WILTSHIRE, San Francise#
QtlW ldo D m > lb « w ith 6»lh . 13 Ml B lliflo ,
Hi dnoblo
(•in rt d m i d i s * l l h hath. BOO Blnglr. fc hu dnttbio
H r n a k fa iM M fl.H fi.IO fi.C M ; I M n n .r * fA c ; H undop M*e
y A (a i E A R N B IO M O N E Y
Start N
OW » •« Sopor «si paMorhl»
• ««W W W i#* rn ing. Position ••(’ urBtl
L «c tu r «a wookly M o o I
W r it « fur m t n lo f
For B est Results M A I F P 0Y9TK M o r C O L L IO IS
In Home Dyeing Pipe Valves, Fittings
You can always
m
glv# richer, deep­
er. more brilliant
colors to faded or
out-of-style dress­
es, h o s t , costs,
draperies, etc., with
Diamond D y s s .
And the .colors stay In through
wear and washing!
Heye’s the reason.
Diamond
Dyes contain the highest quality
anilines money can buy. And It’s
th* anilines that count! They are
the very life of dye«.
Plenty o f pure anilines make
Diamond Dyes easy to use. They
K*> on evenly without spotting or
streaking. T ry them next time
and see why authorities recom­
mend them; why millions o f women
will use no other dyes.
You get Diamond Dyes for the
same pries as ordinary dyes; 18 c,
At any drug store.
i l L L n
* # « êm rm té» S tr ««L P t H— é . Ora
Pump Engines
Farm Tools A Supplies
A L A S K A JUNK CO.
rirst and Taylor Sts., Portland, Orogoa
HOTEL
ROOSEVELT
SAN VWANCISCOS NSW PIN g NOT I L
E t o t t room w ith b oth o r a h ow or
Jraratllddr.
ft
SX00 to 9* .SO.
Gorao. noil door.
P A R K E R ’S
H A IR B A L S A M
Romo ▼ no (»«nil ruff M.|w»UirKAUIn*
Root or oo C o lo r eed
B o o .t r lo G rog oim J Fo/Urf H o t
•Or. and |I.M ol I*ruggi*i«
illtrni iTiriR. WRo l’plfhogU«, N T.
hair «oft * 0)1 fluffy, so c*nU by moll nr *1 ftra«-
Klot*. lllocoz Cbamlcal Works, I'.tcbogo*, It. T.
W. N. U „ P O R TL A N D , NO. 38 1«?«
Protect your hand* with
Cutlcura Soap
Always in view, your hands should he *s
»(tractive os possible. T o prevent redness
tnd roughness caused by daily ttskt, use
Cutlcura Soap every time you wash your
h.ndi; always dry thoroughly . . . Assisi
with Cutlcura Ointment if necessary.
So*p 25c. Ttlrum 25c.
(gtiauft
Stempii each free.
AeUmtt "Cutlcura"
PURITY
Malilcn, M.as,
Ointment 2 3c. and 30c.
f